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Topic: apple trees (Read 720 times)

Hi Everyonea simple question ..can I grow apple trees at 915 feet above sea level .the spot I have in mind is sheltered by a wood to the east but we do get a fair bit of wind and rain and snow when it is absent lower down the hill.

We are at 1000' and very windy and cold. We can grow apples but it's borderline for altitude so only a few varieties, such as Blenheim Orange and some cookers crop well. If you look through the catalogues you will find some varieties marked " suitable to grow in the north" so go for them. Buy from a nursery and phone the owners for advice. You also want varieties which flower late to miss the frosts on the blossom. We lost a lot of the first trees we planted, mainly because our first years were unexpectedly cold and wet, which apples don't like. This year with the early heatwave, we have more apples than we can eat.

Well I've got a dozen planted 3 or 4 years ago at 280m on a north facing slope in the highlands.They grow fine and this year I got a decent crop of apples (although the exceptional weather may have helped).

I have accepted the fact that a poor Spring might mean that some years we get nothing at all. I have also carefully chosen the hardiest varieties I could find and have planted a strip of hazel and willow on the windward side to try and shelter them (shelter makes a big difference to how things grow, at least as much as anything else, even for grass).

So, yes you will be able to grow apples but not as easily as in softer areas.

Good advice/experience has already been provided, but check out what others are growing in your area (successfully or otherwise!). Of course, also make sure you get a good mix of compatible varieties for pollination.

Plums are probably like apples, choose carefully and you should get something. This year I got a decent number of Opel but no Victoria (although that might be partly due to making a mess of pruning it last year).

My best apple varieties (so far) have been James Grieve, Coul Blush, Beauty of Moray and George Cave.

For bees, the bumble variety, you need to create an appropriate environment for them. Plant loads of flowers, not double ones, of all shapes and sizes (open daisy type flowers, tubes, antirrhinum types, herbs such as thyme and marjoram which colonise, garden geraniums, spring bulbs, ) and have willows which produce their pollen at varying times for the queens coming out early. As I mentioned, we are high and extremely windy, but we have loads of bumble bees, but not usually honey bees, which I think can't take such high winds. Windbreaks of hedges and trees, or green mesh, will help your fruit and your flowers by creating a local microclimate, which is a bit warmer, a bit less windy, and generally more conducive to plant growth.